William Paterson (Patterson) was born in County Antrim, Ireland, in 1745. When he
was almost 2 years of age, his family emigrated to America, disembarking at New Castle,
DE. While the father traveled about the country, apparently selling tinware, the family
lived in New London, other places in Connecticut, and in Trenton, NJ. In 1750 he settled
in Princeton, NJ. There, he became a merchant and manufacturer of tin goods. His
prosperity enabled William to attend local private schools and the College of New Jersey
(later Princeton). He took a B.A. in 1763 and an M.A. 3 years later.

Meantime, Paterson had studied law in the city of Princeton under Richard
Stockton, who later was to sign the Declaration of Independence, and near the end of the
decade began practicing at New Bromley, in Hunterdon County. Before long, he moved to
South Branch, in Somerset County, and then in 1779 relocated near New Brunswick at Raritan
estate.

When the War for Independence broke out, Paterson joined the vanguard of the New
Jersey patriots. He served in the provincial congress (1775-76), the constitutional
convention (1776), legislative council (1776-77), and council of safety (1777). During the
last year, he also held a militia commission. From 1776 to 1783 he was attorney general of
New Jersey, a task that occupied so much of his time that it prevented him from accepting
election to the Continental Congress in 1780. Meantime, the year before, he had married
Cornelia Bell, by whom he had three children before her death in 1783. Two years later, he
took a new bride, Euphemia White, but it is not known whether or not they had children.

From 1783, when he moved into the city of New Brunswick, until 1787, Paterson
devoted his energies to the law and stayed out of the public limelight. Then he was chosen
to represent New Jersey at the Constitutional Convention, which he attended only until
late July. Until then, he took notes of the proceedings. More importantly, he figured
prominently because of his advocacy and coauthorship of the New Jersey, or Paterson, Plan,
which asserted the rights of the small states against the large. He apparently returned to
the convention only to sign the final document. After supporting its ratification in New
Jersey, he began a career in the new government.

In 1789 Paterson was elected to the U.S. Senate (1789-90), where he played a
pivotal role in drafting the Judiciary Act of 1789. His next position was governor of his
state (1790-93). During this time, he began work on the volume later published as Laws
of the State of New Jersey (1800) and began to revise the rules and practices of the
chancery and common law courts.

During the years 1793-1806, Paterson served as an associate justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court. Riding the grueling circuit to which federal judges were subjected in those
days and sitting with the full Court, he presided over a number of major trials.

In September 1806, his health failing, the 60-year-old Paterson embarked on a
journey to Ballston Spa, NY, for a cure but died en route at Albany in the home of his
daughter, who had married Stephen Van Rensselaer. Paterson was at first laid to rest in
the nearby Van Rensselaer manor house family vault, but later his body was apparently
moved to the Albany Rural Cemetery, Menands, NY.